466 A.2d 800 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1983
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from an order granting the defendant's motion to dismiss the plaintiff's appeal from a declaratory ruling of the defendant. The facts are as follows: The plaintiff is the parent corporation of three wholly owned subsidiaries, Shearson Loeb Rhodes Asset Management Corporation, Shearson Management Corporation and Bernstein-Macaulay, Inc. In addition, it operates a branch known as the Option Management Account Program. All four *463 entities perform investment advisory services. Besides furnishing investment advice, the plaintiff also provides securities brokerage services.
The Connecticut Uniform Securities Act; General Statutes
During a routine examination of the plaintiff's records, an examiner employed by the state banking department discovered that a duly registered broker-dealer employee of the plaintiff had referred a client to an investment adviser employed by one of the plaintiff's subsidiaries. The defendant informed the plaintiff that this broker-dealer was in violation of 36-474 (d) as he was acting as an investment adviser agent and was not properly registered as such.
The plaintiff thereafter brought a petition to the defendant pursuant to General Statutes
The plaintiff appealed this ruling to the Superior Court pursuant to General Statutes
The single issue for our determination is whether a declaratory judgment action is the exclusive remedy of one aggrieved by a declaratory ruling of the banking commissioner made without having conducted a hearing. The plaintiff argues that the remedy provided under
The plaintiff's claim flies in the face of the plain language of
The plaintiff maintains that despite the unambiguous language of
The later case, Connecticut Life, held that an action for a declaratory judgment would not lie where the plaintiff had failed to exhaust its administrative remedy, an appeal under the UAPA. That case, however, was decided prior to the 1982 amendments to the declaratory rulings provision of the UAPA, namely,
Further to support its position, the plaintiff points to the fact that the legislature, when it amended
We are unclear as to the purpose of that retained sentence in
Finally, the plaintiff claims that the court erred in applying
The answer to this claim is that the statute was not applied retroactively. Although the original petition before the defendant was filed prior to July 1, 1982, the effective date of the amendments to
There is no error.
In this opinion DALY and CIOFFI, Js., concurred.